Remster v. Sullivan

75 N.E. 860, 36 Ind. App. 385, 1905 Ind. App. LEXIS 196
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1905
DocketNo. 5,928
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 860 (Remster v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Remster v. Sullivan, 75 N.E. 860, 36 Ind. App. 385, 1905 Ind. App. LEXIS 196 (Ind. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Wiley, C. J.-

The record in this cause was filed on October 25, 1905, and on the joint petition of the parties the cause was advanced.

In the court below a demurrer to appellees’ complaint was overruled. Appellants answered in two paragraphs, [387]*387to each of which a demurrer for want of facts was addressed and sustained. All of these rulings are assigned as errors.

In their complaint appellees aver that they are male citizens of the United States, and for more than five years last past have been legal residents of the city of Indianapolis and are legal -householders therein; that the appellants are the election commissioners for the city of Indianapolis for the municipal election to be held November 7, 1905; that appellee Sullivan and more than three hundred other householders of Indianapolis, no one of whom has signed the petition of any other candidate for school commissioner to be elected at such election, signed and acknowledged before a notary public and delivered to Jacob P. Dunn, comptroller of said city, more than forty days before November 7, 1905, a petition in writing presenting the name, as a candidate for election as a member of the board of school commissioners of said city, of John H. Emrich, who is more than twenty-five years of age, a resident of the city of Indianapolis, and has been such for more than three years last past, and whom such petition named as a candidate for the term of office of school commissioner commencing January 1, 1908. It is further averred that appellee Deem and more than three hundred other householders of Indianapolis, no one of whom had signed a petition for any other candidate for school commissioner, signed and presented a petition to the comptroller, duly acknowledged, etc., similar in all respects to that above indicated, naming William M. Taylor as a candidate for said office, and aver facts showing his eligibility therefor, for the term commencing January 1, 1908; that more than forty days before November 7, 1905, similar petitions were filed, signed and acknowledged before a notary public by more than three hundred householders of said city, who had signed no petition for other candidates, and delivered to said comptroller, presenting the names of Charles W. [388]*388Moores, Henry O. Sickels and Andrew M. Sweeney as candidates for said office, designating said three persons as candidates for the term commencing January 1, 1906; that more than forty days before the date of the election petitions were filed by more than three hundred householders of said city, no one of whom had signed any other petition, presenting the names of Matthew H. Camden and William IT. Leedy as candidates for said office for the term commencing January 1, 1906; that additional petitions were filed forty days before the day of the election by more than three hundred householders, no one of whom had signed similar petitions, presenting the names for said office of Amelia Keller Puehler, Julius A. Haag, Joseph H. Keller, Charles O. Lowry, Clarence L. Marlatt and Frank Morrison, but that no petition in behalf of any of said persons last named “indicates any term for which such persons so named are candidates.” It is then alleged that appellees are informed and believe, and charge the fact to be, that all the persons in whose behalf petitions have been filed as candidates for school commissioners are eligible to said office; that no petition for the nomination of any candidate has been acknowledged before any notary public, or other officer authorized to take acknowledgments, saving and excepting only the petitions in behalf of John H. Emrich, William M. Taylor, Charles W. Moores, Henry C. Sickels and Andrew M. Sweeney; and that no petitions saving and excepting those of the five last-named candidates and Matthew IT. Camden and William IT. Leedy designate the term for which the candidate named shall be voted for at said election. It is further averred that appellants, as election commissioners, are proposing and threatening to place upon the official ballot to be printed by them and to be voted at such election the names of all of said candidates for whom petitions have been filed, notwithstanding the fact that but five of said candidates have been presented by petitions properly ac[389]*389knowledged; that appellants are proposing to, and “unless restrained, will print an official ballot containing simply the names of such candidates as have been nominated for school commissioners, without designating ripon such official ballots the terms for which such candidates have been respectively nominated;” that if such election commissioners should proceed it would involve the election and the election officers and board of canvassers in doubt and confusion, and render it» difficult to tell what candidates, if any, have been properly elected at such election, and would be productive of litigation, and might deprive the parties of the rights which they possess not only to nominate candidates for such office but to be assured that all other candidates for such office had been nominated in conformity with the provisions of the law; that the two candidates whose petitions appellees have signed, to wit, Emrich and Taylor, have no opposition at such election, and if the names of all candidates for school commissioners should be printed together upon the official ballot, without indication as to the terms for which said candidates have been nominated, in the event any other candidate should receive more votes than said Emrich and Taylor,- it is “probable that the board of canvassers of the city of Indianapolis would certify such other candidates as elected to the place for which said Emrich and Taylor were candidates, and that thereby lasting and irreparable damage would be done to the plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law for the redress of the grievances herein complained of, and that it is impossible to fix accurately in dollars and cents the damage plaintiffs are likely to sustain by reason of the wrongful and unlawful acts of the defendants herein, if suffered to continue; that no penalties whatever are provided by the law for the unlawful and wrongful acts of the defendants; and that injunctive relief is necessary to restrain the continued wrongful acts of the defendants, and unless the same is given it would be necessary [390]*390to resort to a multiplicity of suits in the future to determine the rights of the various candidates.” The prayer of the complaint is that the appellants, constituting the board of election commissioners, be'perpetually enjoined from printing upon the official ballots for school commissioners the names of any other candidates than the five persons, petitions for whose names were duly acknowledged, namely, Emrick, Taylor, Moores, Sickels and Sweeney, and that appellants be perpetually enjoined from printing upon said ballots the names of any candidates for school commissioners without designating upon the official ballot the term for which said candidate is named, whether it be for the term commencing January 1, 1906, or January 1, 1908.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 860, 36 Ind. App. 385, 1905 Ind. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remster-v-sullivan-indctapp-1905.